accosted
英 [əˈkɒstɪd]
美 [əˈkɔːstɪd]
v. (贸然)上前搭讪; (唐突地)走近谈话
accost的过去分词和过去式
柯林斯词典
- VERB (唐突地或带有威胁性地)走近跟…攀谈,上前与…搭讪
If someoneaccostsanother person, especially a stranger, they stop them or go up to them and speak to them in a way that seems rude or threatening.- A man had accosted me in the street.
一个男的在街上和我搭讪。
- A man had accosted me in the street.
双语例句
- Meanwhile her mother had accosted the physician.
与此同时,她母亲已和那医生搭话了。 - A man had accosted me in the street.
一个男的在街上和我搭讪。 - That's the fellow who accosted us just outside the railway station, or I'll eat my hat.
那就是在火车站外同我们打招呼的那个人,我若说错了,我就把这顶帽子吃下去。 - I was accosted by a stranger.
一位路人和我搭话。 - Five minutes ago, Hareton seemed a personification of my youth, not a human being: I felt to him in such a variety of ways, that it would have been impossible to have accosted him rationally.
五分钟以前,哈里顿仿佛是我的青春的一个化身,而不是一个人,他给我许多各种各样的感觉,以至于不可能理性地对待他。 - When he walked down the street, he said, in every block he was accosted by homophobic people.
他说,当他走在街上时,;在每个街区,都有些敌视同性恋的人找他麻烦。 - And she found out from the pregnant woman who accosted you in front of your apartment.
她说曾在你的公寓门口有一个孕妇。 - I'm usually accosted by beggars and drunks as I walk to the station.
我在去车站的路上常常会碰到乞丐和醉汉。 - He accosted me with trepidation and passed on.
他慌慌张张地向我打了个招呼就走开了。 - Both of them accosted my father and kidnapped him.
他们都参与绑架了我父亲。